But his Uncle Harvey has a bad habit of dying. While inconvenient,
this hasn’t ever been a problem until now. Thanks to an evil witch and a poisoned
apple turnover, Harvey is dead again—permanently this time.

As his uncle’s heir, Faryn has to give up shoemaking in order to
accept and refine his magic.

Magic he never wanted.

Unwilling to let go of his dream, but unable to escape his destiny,
Faryn combines the two and discovers a knack for making magical shoes. He also
learns that turning a person into a goose is a lot easier than turning her back, and
that he severely underestimated how much trouble magic can be.</
div>

The witch who killed his uncle is trying to control all the magic of the
land, and it’s up to Faryn to stop her. If only he can get his magic to cooperate in
time.

an autographed copy of Slippers of Pearl

a magical pouch to keep it in

and a Slippers of Pearl bookmark

A Bite of Faerie</
span>

(Available October 2nd-ish)

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div>

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Fourteen-year-old Cherrie Wilding stopped believing in fairies after her
Grams had a stroke that left her a silent, empty stranger. But whether she believes
in them or not, one of them bit her, and now the venom is spreading through her
system and causing . . . complications. Like an allergy to iron and a craving for
milk.

It turns out that fairy venom has the power to turn mortals
into small, winged versions of themselves. And it gets better. Grams's stroke was the
result of her light—her fairy soul—being stolen. The fairy who bit Cherrie demands
her to help steal Grams’s light back. </
span>

As much as Cherrie wants to save Grams, her need to
protect her older brother from the fairies and the rest of the real world wins out.
Who knows what lurks in a world populated by winged menaces? But when the
fairy talks Cherrie’s brother into going to the fairy realm, Cherrie mounts a rescue
attempt to save him. To her surprise, it’s not her brother who needs rescuing—
it’s the fairies. Someone is stealing their lights and imprisoning them, and it’s up to
Cherrie and her brother to free them. But saving the fairies, keeping her brother
safe, and returning home requires the help of the Phoenix. And the price for his aid
doesn’t come cheap. If Cherrie wants to succeed, she must be willing to part with her
greatest possession: her heart.